S&EJ Bibliography

Henrik Bødker, Irene Neverla, eds., (2013). Environmental Journalism. Routledge.

Deborah Blum (2021). “Science Journalism Grows Up.” Science. 23 Apr 2021. Vol 372, Issue 6540 p 323.

Douglas Brinkley (2010). The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America. Harper

Douglas Brinkley (2022). Silent Spring Revolution: John F. Kennedy, Rachel Carson, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, and the Great Environmental Awakening. Harper

John Burnham (1992). “Of Science and superstition: The media and biopolitics.” In Craid L. LaMay and Everett Dennis, eds., Media and the Environment. Island Press.

Tina Cordova (2023). “What Oppenheimer doesn’t tell you about the Trinity test,” New York Times, Aug. 1, 2023, p 22.

William Cronin (2021). “Two cheers for the whig interpretation of history,” Perspectives on History, American Historical Association, Sept 1, 2012.

David Dowling (2023) “Health Reform in the Mid-nineteenth-century New York Periodical Press,” in R. Wilson (Ed.), New York: A Literary History, Cambridge University Press.

Martin Durkin (2007). The Great Global Warming Swindle. Documentary video, 2007.

Edith Efron, (1984) The Apocalyptics. Simon & Schuster; Also Rothman, S., and Lichter, R. (1986), “The Media, Elite Conflict and Risk Perception in Nuclear Energy Policy,” American Political Science Association.

Edwin Emery (1972), The Press and America, 2nd edition. Prentice Hall, 1972, p. 29.

Glen Feighery (2023). “Teaching essay: Frontier values vs. environmentalism in news coverage of Colorado river dams.” Journalism History. June, 2023.

Barbara Friedman, Carolyn Kitch, Therese Lueck, Amber Roessner & Betty Winfield (2009). “Stirred, Not Yet Shaken: Integrating Women’s History into Media History,” American Journalism, 26:1, 160-174, 2009.
DOI: 10.1080/08821127.2009.10677706

Daryl Hartman (2023). The Battle of Ink and Ice, A Sensational Story of News Barons, North Pole Explorers, and the Making of Modern Media, Viking.

Jim Hartz, Rich Chappell (1997). “Worlds Apart: How the distance between science and journalism threatens America’s future,” Nashville, TN: First Amendment Center.

John Hersey (1946). Hiroshima, The New Yorker, Aug. 23, 1946.
On the web: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1946/08/31/hiroshima

Robert Hunter (1971). The Storming of the Mind: Inside the Consciousness Revolution. McClelland and Stewart; Doubleday.

Waldemar Kaempffert (1945). “Radiologists determine after effects of explosions of atomic bombs not the whole truth,” New York Times, Sept. 16, 1945, p E9.

Waldemar Kaempffert (1946). “Continuing studies of atomic radiation show its effect on living creatures,” New York Times, March 17, 1945, p E9.

Michael Keating (1993). Covering the Environment: a handbook on environmental journalism. National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy, University of Western Ontario, Canada.

Vincent Kiernan (2022). Atomic Bill: A Journalist’s Dangerous Ambition in the Shadow of the Bomb. Three Hills

William (Bill) Kovarik (2022). “Changing views of extinction in history,” In David B. Sachsman, Eric Freedman, Sarah Shipley Hiles, (Eds.), Communicating Endangered Species: Extinction, News and Public Policy,. New York: Taylor & Francis. https://billkovarik.com/endangered-species-news-and-public-policy-a-history

William (Bill) Kovarik (2019). “International Environmental Journalism” in David B. Sachsman, and JoAnn Myer Valenti (Eds.), Routledge Handbook of Environmental Journalism. London UK: Routledge.

Hillier Krieghbaum (1967). Science and the Mass Media, New York University Press.

William L. Laurence, “US atom bomb site belies Tokyo tales,” New York Times, Sept. 12, 1945, p 1.

Gabbi Mocatta (2015). Environmental Journalism. Open School of Journalism, Deakin University, Victoria, Australia. On the web: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/361052520_Environmental_Journalism

Chad Montrie (2018). The Myth of Silent Spring: Rethinking the Origins of American Environmentalism, University of California Press.

National Park Service – NPS (2023). “The story of the teddy bear.” On the web: https://www.nps.gov/thrb/learn/historyculture/storyofteddybear.htm

Nark Neuzil, William (Bill) Kovarik (1996). Mass Media and Environmental Conflict: America’s Green Crusades. Sage.

Mark Neuzil (2008) The Environment and the Press, From Adventure Writing to Advocacy. Northwestern University Press.

Joseph A. Pratt (1980). “Letting the Grandchildren Do It: Environmental Planning During the Ascent of Oil as the Major Energy Source,” The Public Historian 2:4, p. 28.

Richard Rhodes (1986). The Making of the Atomic Bomb. Simon & Schuster.

Nelson Smith, Leonard J. Theberge (1983), Energy Coverage, Media Panic, Longman, p. 142.

Alex Wellerstein (2022). Restricted Data: The history of nuclear secrecy in the United States. University of Chicago Press.

Rex Weyler (2020). “Remembering Bob Hunter, Mind Bomber.” Greenpeace International. On the web at: https://www.greenpeace.org/international/story/30250/bob-hunter-greenpeace-founder-memorial-mindbombs-rex-weyler/

Wikipedia, “Science Journalism.” Accessed Aug. 1, 2023
On the web: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_journalism

Wisconsin Conservation Hall of Fame. “Carl Schurz.” On the web: https://wchf.org/carl-schurz/.

Robert L. Wyss (2007, 2018) Covering the Environment: How Journalists Work the Green Beat. Routledge.